Unsold Hindi books pose a problem
UPSC Study Note: Unsold Hindi Books — Hindi-Medium Higher Education & CSTT
1. At a Glance
- Core issue: Despite the Central Government producing 1,008 Hindi-medium textbooks through the Hindi Granth Akademies and the Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology (CSTT), only 200 were prescribed or recommended by universities in Hindi-speaking States — exposing a critical gap between policy intent and institutional uptake. [S1]
- Why it matters for UPSC: Directly tests knowledge of India's Official Language Policy, three-language formula, the constitutional provisions under Article 343–351, and the institutional machinery (CSTT, Hindi Granth Akademies) for Hindi promotion in higher education.
- Cross-cutting relevance: Sits at the intersection of language policy, higher education governance, centre-state relations, and administrative implementation failures — high-value for GS-I, GS-II, and Essay.
- Archival significance: The article is a vintage Hindu archive piece (June 21, reprinted June 23, 2026), reflecting a systemic problem that has persisted for decades, making it a longitudinal policy failure case study. [S1]
2. Why in the News
- The Hindu republished this archival report on June 23, 2026, highlighting the persistent structural problem of unsold Hindi textbooks — contextually relevant as India continues debating Hindi imposition vs. multilingual education and the New Education Policy (NEP) 2020's mother-tongue emphasis.
- In September 2025, PIB reported a national workshop on "Transcreation of Uniform Scientific and Technical Terminology for Indian Languages" inaugurated at ISI Kolkata (Sept 1, 2025) — signalling the issue of Hindi/regional-language scientific terminology remains live policy. [S2]
- In March 2026, PIB reported Dr. Jitendra Singh's statement: "Greater Use of Hindi in Scientific and Administrative Work Strengthens Public Connect" — reaffirming official push for Hindi in technical domains. [S3]
3. Background & Evolution
- 1949–50: Constituent Assembly debates on official language concluded with Hindi (Devanagari script) as the Union's official language under Article 343, with English to continue for 15 years.
- 1961: Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology (CSTT) established under the Ministry of Education (now Ministry of Education / DoHE) to standardise Hindi equivalents for scientific and technical terms and produce university-level textbooks.
- 1963: Official Languages Act, 1963 enacted — extended English use alongside Hindi in official purposes indefinitely, reducing urgency for Hindi-medium switchover.
- 1960s–70s: Hindi Granth Akademies set up in Hindi-belt States (UP, Bihar, MP, Rajasthan, Haryana etc.) to produce textbooks for university-level instruction in Hindi medium.
- 1968: Parliament passed the Official Language Resolution endorsing the three-language formula — Hindi, English, and a regional language in school curricula.
- Programme total: 1,008 textbooks produced under the combined CSTT-Hindi Granth Akademi programme; only 200 prescribed by Hindi-State universities — a ~20% uptake rate. [S1]
- Root paradox: Books were authored by the very university teachers sitting on boards of studies; subject panels of professors and Heads of Department of the five Hindi-speaking States had recommended them — yet universities failed to prescribe them for approved courses. [S1]
4. Core Static Facts
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Implementing bodies | Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology (CSTT); Hindi Granth Akademies |
| Parent Ministry | Ministry of Education (Dept. of Higher Education); earlier Ministry of Human Resource Development |
| CSTT established | 1961 |
| Statutory/Constitutional basis | Article 343 (Hindi as official language); Article 351 (directive to spread Hindi); Official Languages Act, 1963 |
| Total textbooks produced | 1,008 |
| Textbooks prescribed by universities | Only 200 (approx. 20%) |
| Hindi-speaking States involved | Five (UP, Bihar, MP, Rajasthan, Haryana — the Hindi belt) |
| Authorship | University teachers already on State Government boards of studies |
| Recommendation mechanism | Subject panels of professors and Heads of Department of the five Hindi States |
| Three-language formula | Endorsed by Parliament 1968; Hindi + English + regional language |
| Article 344 | Official Language Commission and Parliamentary Committee on Official Language |
| Article 351 | Directive for the Union to promote spread of Hindi |
| Eighth Schedule | Lists 22 scheduled languages of India (Hindi included) |
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Fiscal waste: Production of ~808 unsold/unprescribed textbooks represents direct government expenditure with zero utilisation — a classic case of supply-side policy failure without demand-side alignment.
- Hindi Granth Akademies are State-funded bodies; Central grants channelled through CSTT represent dual expenditure without coordinated university adoption mandates.
- The opportunity cost of unused textbooks hampers the viability of Hindi-medium technical education as an affordable alternative to English-medium private institutions.
Social
- Access and equity: Hindi-medium higher education was designed to enable first-generation learners from rural Hindi-belt backgrounds to access university education without English proficiency barriers.
- Failure of uptake perpetuates English as cultural capital — advantaging urban/elite students and deepening socio-economic stratification in technical and professional fields.
- The paradox that university professors who authored the books did not prescribe them reveals an elite-practitioner disconnect — academics writing for policy but not implementing it in their own institutions.
Legal / Constitutional
- Article 343–351 (Part XVII of the Constitution) form the Official Language provisions — the CSTT and Hindi Granth Akademi programme is a direct statutory implementation of Article 351 (spread Hindi).
- Official Languages Act, 1963 — did not make Hindi-medium instruction mandatory in universities, creating a legal gap that allowed universities to continue English-medium without violating any law.
- University autonomy under the UGC Act, 1956 gives universities discretion over curricula; Central Government cannot mandate textbook prescription — explaining the structural impasse.
Administrative
- Federal bottleneck: State universities operate under State government jurisdiction; Central bodies (CSTT) can produce but not mandate adoption — a classic concurrent/exclusive list tension.
- The article reveals a coordination failure: Central Government assumed that books authored by university teachers would naturally be prescribed — an assumption that ignored institutional inertia and academic autonomy.
- Absence of an incentive mechanism (grants tied to Hindi-medium adoption, course fee waivers) meant universities had no structural reason to change existing English-medium prescriptions.
Ethical / Governance
- Accountability gap: Subject panels and boards of studies recommended books at the policy level but did not follow through at the institutional level — raising questions about dual roles and conflicts of interest.
- The programme exemplifies performative compliance: stakeholders participated in the recommendation process without genuine commitment to implementation.
Historical
- The Hindi-medium higher education debate mirrors the Kothari Commission (1964–66) recommendations on three-language formula — long-standing recognition of the problem without resolution.
- Comparable to the Macaulay Minute (1835) legacy debate: English deeply embedded in India's educational infrastructure; displacement requires more than policy instruments alone.
- Post-independence, this pattern recurs: Radhakrishnan Commission (1948–49) on university education also flagged medium-of-instruction as critical — yet English remained dominant. [S4]
6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)
- September 1, 2025: PIB reports inauguration of a national workshop on "Transcreation of Uniform Scientific and Technical Terminology for Indian Languages" at ISI Kolkata — CSTT and Ministry of Education involved, indicating the unresolved CSTT mandate remains active. [S2]
- March 9, 2026: Union Minister Dr. Jitendra Singh stated that "Greater Use of Hindi in Scientific and Administrative Work Strengthens Public Connect" — reaffirming the Central Government's push for Hindi in technical domains, directly contextualising the archival issue. [S3]
- NEP 2020 implementation (ongoing): Mandates mother-tongue/regional language as medium of instruction up to Class 5 (extendable to Class 8) — revives the debate about Hindi-medium higher education and technical terminology standardisation.
- June 23, 2026: The Hindu republishes the archival article on unsold Hindi books — signalling editorial relevance to ongoing policy discussions on Hindi in education. [S1]
7. Prelims Hooks (high-density factual bullets)
- CSTT (Commission for Scientific and Technical Terminology) was established in 1961 under the Ministry of Education to develop Hindi equivalents for scientific/technical terms.
- Article 343 of the Constitution designates Hindi in Devanagari script as the official language of the Union.
- Article 351 places a directive on the Union to promote the spread of Hindi and develop it as a medium of expression for composite culture.
- Article 344 provides for an Official Language Commission and a Parliamentary Committee on Official Language.
- Eighth Schedule of the Constitution currently lists 22 scheduled languages (originally 14 at commencement in 1950).
- The Official Languages Act, 1963 extended the use of English for official Union purposes indefinitely alongside Hindi.
- The three-language formula was formally endorsed by Parliament through the Official Language Resolution of 1968.
- Hindi Granth Akademies were established in Hindi-belt States specifically to produce university-level textbooks in Hindi medium.
- Of 1,008 Hindi textbooks produced under the CSTT-Hindi Granth Akademi programme, only 200 (~20%) were prescribed by Hindi-State universities. [S1]
- Books were authored by university teachers already serving on State boards of studies — making non-prescription a governance paradox. [S1]
- UGC Act, 1956 grants autonomy to universities in curriculum matters, creating a legal basis for universities to resist Central Government textbook mandates.
- The Kothari Commission (1964–66) was the landmark education commission that recommended the three-language formula and addressed medium-of-instruction issues.
- Part XVII (Articles 343–351) of the Constitution deals entirely with Official Language provisions.
- A national workshop on "Transcreation of Scientific and Technical Terminology for Indian Languages" was held at ISI Kolkata, September 2025. [S2]
- NEP 2020 recommends mother-tongue/home language as medium of instruction at least up to Grade 5, preferably Grade 8.
8. Mains Relevance
GS Papers: - GS-I: Indian culture — plurality of languages; post-independence consolidation; language policy evolution - GS-II: Governance — issues in implementation of education policies; Centre-State relations; role of regulatory bodies (UGC); federalism - GS-IV (Essay): Language, identity, and nation-building; equity in access to higher education
Syllabus headings: - GS-II: "Issues relating to development and management of Social Sector/Services relating to Education." - GS-II: "Devolution of powers and finances up to local levels and challenges therein" (federal dimension of language policy) - GS-I: "Modern Indian history — social and cultural developments"
Plausible Mains question stems: 1. "The failure of Hindi Granth Akademies and CSTT to achieve meaningful university adoption of Hindi-medium textbooks reflects a systemic governance failure rather than a language problem. Examine." 2. "Critically analyse the constitutional provisions relating to official language policy in India. How far have these provisions succeeded in reconciling national unity with linguistic diversity?" 3. "The New Education Policy 2020's emphasis on mother-tongue instruction revives a decades-old debate on medium of instruction in higher education. Evaluate the challenges in implementing such a policy at the university level, with reference to historical experience."
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Official Languages Act, 1963 | Direct statutory context for Hindi-medium textbook programme |
| Part XVII of the Constitution (Arts. 343–351) | Constitutional foundation of the entire official language apparatus |
| Three-Language Formula & Kothari Commission | Policy framework within which Hindi Granth Akademies operated |
| New Education Policy (NEP) 2020 | Revives mother-tongue instruction debate; direct policy successor |
| University Grants Commission (UGC) Act, 1956 | Grants university autonomy that structurally limits Centre's textbook mandate |
| Eighth Schedule to the Constitution | Lists 22 scheduled languages; context for linguistic plurality |
| Anti-Hindi agitations (Tamil Nadu, 1937, 1965) | Non-Hindi state resistance to Hindi imposition; explains political constraints |
| Radhakrishnan Commission on University Education (1948–49) | First post-independence review of medium-of-instruction; historical precedent |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- CSTT vs. Sahitya Akademi confusion: CSTT (est. 1961) handles scientific/technical terminology standardisation; Sahitya Akademi (est. 1954) handles literary recognition and promotion — entirely different mandates. Many aspirants conflate the two.
- Article 343 vs. Article 351: Article 343 designates Hindi as official language; Article 351 directs the Union to promote and develop Hindi — the latter is the constitutional basis for CSTT's mandate. Confusing the two leads to wrong answers.
- "Official language" ≠ "National language": India has no constitutionally declared national language. Hindi is the official language of the Union under Article 343. This is a perennial trap.
- Hindi Granth Akademi vs. Central Hindi Directorate: Hindi Granth Akademies are State-level bodies producing textbooks; the Central Hindi Directorate (under Ministry of Education) handles Hindi promotion at the national level — wrong attribution in MCQs is common.
- Assuming the article reflects a current (2026) event: The piece is a re-published archive article from the 1960s–70s. The policy problem described is historical, though the underlying structural issues persist. Treating it as a 2026 new development would be factually incorrect.
11. Sources
- [S1] "Unsold Hindi books pose a problem" — The Hindu archive, republished June 23, 2026 — https://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/2026-06-23/th_international/articleG0QG5BRQJ-15063454.ece — (Tier 4)
- [S2] "Workshop on Transcreation of Scientific and Technical Terminology for Indian Languages Inaugurated at ISI Kolkata" — Press Information Bureau, Sept 1, 2025 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2162587 — (Tier 1)
- [S3] "Greater Use of Hindi in Scientific and Administrative Work Strengthens Public Connect: Dr. Jitendra Singh" — Press Information Bureau, March 9, 2026 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleseDetail.aspx?PRID=2237162 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] PRS India — "Reforms in Content and Design of School Text Books" (committee report) — https://prsindia.org/policy/report-summaries/reforms-in-content-and-design-of-school-text-books — (Tier 1/reference)
Note: This topic is grounded primarily in a Hindu archival article (Tier 4) cross-referenced with two PIB press releases (Tier 1). The constitutional and statutory facts (Articles 343, 344, 351; Official Languages Act 1963; UGC Act 1956) are well-established law — no source citation beyond the Constitution text is required for those.